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Cartoons List of
Peanuts Characters
Charlie Brown Clothing
Charlie Brown Books
Charlie Brown DVDs
Charlie Brown Kitchen Products
Charlie Brown Toys
Charlie Brown Video Games
Charles "Charlie" Brown is the main character in the
comic strip Peanuts by Charles M. Schulz.
Charlie Brown and his creator have a common connection in that they are
both the sons of barbers, but whereas Schulz's work is described as
"most shining example of the American success story", Charlie Brown is
an example of "the great American un-success story" in that he fails in
almost everything he does.
Character
Charlie Brown is a loveable loser, a child possessed of endless
determination and hope, but who is ultimately dominated by his
insecurities and a "permanent case of bad luck", and often taken
advantage of by his peers. He is sometimes a scapegoat for bad
situations he is only tangentially involved in. These traits are best
seen in the history of his baseball team, where Charlie Brown is the
manager of the team and its pitcher. Charlie Brown is constantly cursed
as a pitcher, often giving up tremendous hits which blast him off the
mound. Charlie Brown's dog Snoopy is one of the few particularly
competent players; the team itself is poor and tends to win only by
small but important technicalities, often because of Charlie's
non-involvement. Circumstances invariably arise to lessen his rare
victories (a misspelled bowling trophy, a prize credit for free
haircuts despite his father being a barber), though he is usually
optimistic due to their sheer rarity. In It's the Great Pumpkin,
Charlie Brown a running gag is Charlie putting too many holes in his
ghost sheet and only getting rocks-although in a early newspaper comic
version it's Linus who has too many holes in his Halloween costume.
Charlie Brown is also an enthusiastic kite-flyer, but a running joke is
that his kites keep landing in a "Kite-Eating Tree" or suffering even
worse fates. Once in 1958, he finally got the kite to fly before it
spontaneously combusted in the air. However in the July 13, 1961 strip
Charlie Brown not only gets his kite to fly, but to fly so high that he
has to ask Lucy to tie on some extra string. The punch line is that
Lucy does this in a huge bow-followed by various odds and
ends-including a heavy chain which brings the kite down. The kite is
airborne through the four panels of the strip.[4] A Sunday episode
showed that once Charlie Brown tried to fly his kite in winter - and it
froze solid in the air.
Lucy tends to outright belittle Charlie Brown, often calling him and
Linus "blockheads", best by the 'football gag'; every autumn Lucy
promises to hold a football for Charlie Brown to kick, and every year
she pulls it away as he follows through, causing him to fly in the air
and land painfully on his back. He was never shown as succeeding in
kicking the football in the comic strip, although animated features
have played with the concept.
Charlie Brown is drawn with only a small curl of hair at the front of
his head, and a little in the back. Though this is often interpreted as
him being bald, Charles Schulz explained that he saw Charlie Brown as
having hair that was so light, and cut so short, that it was not seen
very well.[5] Charlie Brown has often mentioned getting a haircut, or
his hair in general, throughout the strip's run. Snoopy thinks of his
owner as "that round-headed kid". He almost always wears black shorts
and his trademark short-sleeved shirt, usually yellow, with a black
zig-zag stripe around the middle.
Charlie Brown often utters the catch phrase "Good grief!" when
astonished or dismayed. In moments of extreme disappointment or despair
he sometimes simply cries out, "I can't stand it!" Other times, he will
exclaim 'Augh!' when particularly frustrated or surprised.
From 1966 to 1987, Peanuts Sunday strips were often (unofficially)
titled Peanuts featuring Good Ol' Charlie Brown. Schulz later stated
that he had wanted to name the strip Good Ol' Charlie Brown but that
the name Peanuts was chosen by the cartoon syndicate instead; as a
result, some people inferred that Charlie Brown's name was "Peanuts".
Schulz suggested the Sunday title as a clarification device.
Names and nicknames
Since the early strips, where Shermy mentions him and Patty refers to
him directly, Charlie Brown is nearly always referred to or addressed
by his full name by everyone whenever possible. Umberto Eco has pointed
out that the fact that Charlie Brown is invariably referred to by his
full name follows a convention found in epic poetry giving Charlie
Brown a sense of universal identification. It was eventually revealed
that the first person to have called him "Charlie Brown" was Poochie, a
blonde little girl who played with Snoopy as a pup. Peppermint Patty,
calls him "Chuck" most of the time, while her friend Marcie usually
uses "Charles"; in 1979 they admitted to each other that each probably
has a crush on him. Snoopy usually only obliquely refers to Charlie as
"the round-headed kid", while Eudora also calls him "Charles". A minor
character named Peggy Jean in the early 1990s who called him "Brownie
Charles", because Charlie Brown, in his typical nervous and awkward
fashion, messed up his own name when he introduced himself and couldn't
bring himself to correct the mistake when it turned out he liked when
she called him that. Also, Lucy called him "Charlie" at one point in A
Charlie Brown Christmas. Sally, for obvious reasons to avoid
awkward-sounding dialogue, simply calls him 'big brother', though she
has used his full name when discussing him with others.
History
Charlie Brown was one of the original cast members of Peanuts when it
debuted in 1950, and the butt of the first joke in the strip. Aside
from some stylistic differences in Schulz's art style at the time,
Charlie Brown looked much the same. He did, however, wear an unadorned
T-shirt; the stripe was added within the first year of publication, in
order to add more color to the strip. Charlie Brown stated in an early
strip (November 3, 1950) that he was "only four years old", but he aged
over the next two decades, being six years old as of November 17, 1957
and "eight-and-a-half years old" by July 11, 1979. Later references
continue to peg Charlie Brown as being approximately eight years
old.[5] Another early strip, on October 30, 1950, has Patty and Shermy
wishing Charlie Brown a happy birthday on that day, although they are
not sure they have the date right.[5] Allegedly, he was named for
Schulz's love for Edgar Huntly.
Initially, Charlie Brown was more assertive and playful than his
character would later become: He would play tricks on other cast
members, and some strips had romantic overtones between Charlie Brown
and Patty and Violet. He would cause headaches for adults (knocking all
the comic books off their stand at a newsstand, for instance), though
he was from the start not especially competent at any skill.
Charlie Brown soon evolved into the Sad Sack character he's best known
as: feeling enslaved to the care of Snoopy, beset by comments from
everyone around him. Common approaches to the strip's storylines
included Charlie Brown stubbornly refusing to give in even when all is
lost from the outset (e.g., standing on the pitcher's mound alone on
the baseball field, refusing to let a torrential downpour interrupt his
beloved game), or suddenly displaying a skill and rising within a
field, only to suffer a humiliating loss just when he's about to win it
all (most famously, Charlie Brown's efforts to win the statewide
spelling bee in the feature-length film A Boy Named Charlie Brown).
Charlie Brown never receives Valentines or Christmas cards and only
gets rocks when he goes trick or treating on Halloween but never loses
hope that he will. His misfortunes garnered so much sympathy from the
audience that many young viewers in North America of the Be My
Valentine, Charlie Brown and It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown TV
specials have sent Valentine cards and Halloween candy respectively to
the broadcasting television network in an effort to show Charlie Brown
they cared for him. This also extended to protest letters when viewers
felt the victimization of Charlie Brown went too far such as in It's
Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown where Charlie Brown is publicly derided
for making his football team lose when it is obvious that he is not at
fault.
Charlie Brown maintained this demeanor until the strip ended its run in
2000, and classic strips run in many newspapers today. He did have
occasional victories, though, such as hitting a game-winning home run
off a pitch by Roy Hobbs' great-granddaughter on March 30, 1993 (though
she later admitted she let him hit the home runs) and soundly defeating
"Joe Agate" in a game of marbles on April 11, 1995. Usually, Charlie
Brown was a representative for everyone going through a time when they
feel like nothing ever goes right for them; however, Charlie Brown
refuses to give up. In the final weeks of his strip, determined to
finally have a winning baseball season at last, Charlie Brown tried to
channel Joe Torre, which made his sister think he was cracking up.
He is also known as Good Ol' Charlie Brown.
Relationships
Despite all this, and despite the abuse he has often received, Charlie
Brown has many friends, the best being Lucy's brother Linus, who may
occasionally admonish Charlie Brown, but stands by him. Linus's
brother, Rerun van Pelt, also seems young enough to look up to and
admire Charlie Brown; in one comic strip, he wanted to watch him pitch
in a baseball game, thinking that he was a master at it. Charlie Brown
has no real enemies aside from intangible unluckiness, though
practically all his friends are blithely critical of him at some point.
His dog Snoopy seldom treats him with respect except when "That
Round-Headed Kid" pleases him. Nonetheless though they are often shown
hugging, particularly after they have been reunited after a separation,
and Charlie Brown has implied he enjoys the fact he is depended on by
someone.
Linus initially appeared as an infant, but as he aged (and grew to a
year or two younger than Charlie Brown) he became a profound
philosopher and Charlie Brown's best friend, often supporting each
other in small ways when the other's foibles had been painfully exposed
(Schroeder and Lucy van Pelt were also significantly younger than
Charlie Brown when they first appeared, but aged to the point where
they became his peers). Linus very often serves as a way for Charlie
Brown to express his thoughts and woes without judgment or
condemnation; he almost never attempts to convince or directly advise
Charlie Brown of anything, and tends to only be critical in an
intellectual or philosophical way. Partially because of this quality,
he is the only person to ever have any direct impact on Charlie Brown's
actions. This is most clearly seen in "A Charlie Brown Christmas";
after Charlie Brown wonders aloud whether anyone can tell him what
Christmas is all about, Linus simply recites the Christmas story from
the Gospel of Luke, leaving Charlie Brown to successfully draw his own
conclusions. The two of them are shown sitting and talking behind the
often-used brick wall more than any characters.
Lucy, along with early characters Violet, Patty, and sometimes Shermy,
often attacked Charlie Brown physically or verbally. On one occasion
when Lucy was little, she falsely claimed that Charlie Brown was about
to hit her, and grinned in the background when Patty came to
retaliate.[citation needed] Violet once hit Charlie Brown with her doll
after he accidentally hit it with his tricycle. Shermy once sent
Charlie Brown home because he allowed a goal during a hockey game.
Although Charlie Brown had romantic occasions with Violet and Patty,
the two clearly favored Shermy. Yet when Charlie Brown asked Lucy
during their psychiatrist booth sessions why no one liked him, Lucy
always laid the blame on Charlie Brown himself. Lucy often thinks
ridiculous facts are true (i.e: there's a different sun every day, snow
comes up out of the ground, birds can fly to the moon and back)and
regards them as "little known facts", and thinks that true facts are
silly, and laughs at Charlie's attempts to prove her wrong. Lucy is
openly contemptuous of Charlie Brown, having no qualms whatsoever about
crushing his hopes and telling him that he is worthless, friendless,
and destined to be a failure.
Like all adults in the strip, Charlie Brown's parents are never seen
(nor "heard" in speech balloons, except in a few very early comics),
but occasionally referenced. His father is a barber (as was Schulz's).
His mother is a housewife.
In 1959, Charlie Brown's sister Sally was born. She resembled Charlie
Brown in some ways, but with a shock of blonde hair. Like Linus, Lucy,
and Schroeder, Sally began as an infant but soon became "mature" enough
to interact with the other characters on a more-or-less equal basis.
Initially Charlie Brown doted on her, though she too became a thorn in
his side as she would pester him for help with her homework, and berate
him for misunderstanding concepts (despite herself being the one in the
wrong). Charlie Brown would stoically and guiltily bear this, although
sometimes he was able to let Sally dig her own holes without pulling
him in with her while very occasionally firmly putting his foot down on
truly unacceptable behavior.
Charlie Brown has a pen pal, but because he uses a fountain pen (rather
than ballpoint) and because he has less skill than others at keeping
the ink flow under control, he resorts to graphite and starts off the
letters, "Dear Pencil Pal". These correspondences, which began in the
August 25, 1958 strip, are usually one-way; but on April 14, 1960,
Charlie Brown read Lucy a letter he'd received from his Pen Pal. In the
letter, the Pen Pal revealed that he or she had read Charlie Brown's
latest letter to his/her class, and that they all agreed he must be a
nice person and someone who is pleasant to know. In response to which,
Charlie Brown uttered a vigorous "Ha!" to Lucy. In a strip series in
1994, the Pen Pal was revealed to be a girl in Scotland named Morag.
Charlie Brown also fantasized about a future romance with Morag, but
his plans were crushed when he learned Morag had 30 other Pen Pals.
Charlie Brown is infatuated with an often unseen character known simply
as "the Little Red-Haired Girl", though he rarely has the courage to
talk to her, and when he does (in encounters which always occur
off-panel) it always goes badly. He frequently says that the reason he
cannot talk to her is that "She's something and I'm nothing. When she
looks over at me, there's nothing to see. How can she talk to someone
who's nothing?" Even when she temporarily moves away, Charlie Brown
still fails to work up the courage to talk to her, despite Linus's
frantic urging. Because of his preoccupation with the Little Red-Haired
Girl, he remains oblivious to the occasional attentions of Peppermint
Patty and Marcie. In particular, he has a tendency to say the wrong
thing at the wrong time, to both of them; Peppermint Patty when she
seeks reassurance over her "big nose" and her lack of femininity, and
Marcie when she tries to show that she cares about him (once, when
asking if Charlie Brown missed her while she was away, got the reply
"my cereal's getting soggy"). Charlie Brown once had a brief, yet
surprisingly successful flirtation with a minor character called Peggy
Jean whom he met at summer camp.
Catch phrases
Charlie Brown has accumulated many memorable catch phrases and
utterances:
* "Good Grief!"
* "I (just) can't stand it."
* "My stomach hurts."
* "Why can't I have a normal [or an ordinary] dog like everyone else?"
* "AAAAARRRRRRGH!(or AAAAAUUUUGGGHHH!)"
* "Rats!"
* "Somehow, I never (quite) know what's going on..."
* "Man's best friend. Ha!"
* "I got a rock!"
Charlie Brown's most famous expression, "Good grief!" was ranked at #18
on the TV Land program The 100 Greatest TV Quotes and Catchphrases.
Portrayals
* 1960's child actor Peter Robbins first played Charlie Brown in A
Charlie Brown Christmas in 1965. His last performance as Charlie Brown
was in 1969. Since then various actors, including Chad Allen, have
played the character. Erin Chase was the first girl to play Charlie
Brown. She played him for the "This Is America, Charlie Brown" series.
1980's child actor Brad Kesten voiced the Saturday Morning series "The
Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show" as well as "What Have We Learned,
Charlie Brown?", "Is This Goodbye, Charlie Brown?", "and It's an
Adventure, Charlie Brown".
* In the off-Broadway musical You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown (1967),
Charlie Brown was played by Gary Burghoff. In the 1999 Broadway
revival, he was portrayed by Anthony Rapp.
* Michael Mandy provided the voice of Charlie Brown for Life Is A
Circus, Charlie Brown, It's Magic, Charlie Brown, and A Charlie Brown
Celebration. He also voiced the character in three commercials for
Dolly Madison Cakes & Pies, and many Buena Vista 45rpm
Read-Along-Books.
* Samuel Dunford portrayed Charlie Brown in the 2006 Namco game "Snoopy
vs. the Red Baron".
TV Specials
| Name |
Original Air Date |
Network |
Current Network |
|
A Boy Named Charlie Brown |
1963 |
Unaired |
None |
|
A Charlie Brown Christmas |
December 9, 1965 |
CBS |
ABC |
| Charlie Brown's All-Stars |
June 8, 1966 |
CBS |
None |
|
It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown |
October 27, 1966 |
CBS |
ABC |
| You're in Love, Charlie Brown |
June 12, 1967 |
CBS |
None |
| He's Your Dog, Charlie Brown |
February 14, 1968 |
CBS |
None |
| Charlie Brown and Charles Schulz |
May 24, 1969 |
CBS |
None |
| It Was a Short Summer, Charlie Brown |
September 27, 1969 |
CBS |
None |
| Play It Again, Charlie Brown |
March 28, 1971 |
CBS |
None |
|
You're Not Elected, Charlie Brown |
October 29, 1972 |
CBS |
ABC |
| There's No Time for Love, Charlie Brown |
March 11, 1973 |
CBS |
None |
|
A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving |
November 20, 1973 |
CBS |
ABC |
| It's a Mystery, Charlie Brown |
February 1, 1974 |
CBS |
None |
|
It's the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown |
April 9, 1974 |
CBS |
ABC |
|
Be My Valentine, Charlie Brown |
January 28, 1975 |
CBS |
|
| You're a Good Sport, Charlie Brown |
October 28, 1975 |
CBS |
None |
| Happy Anniversary, Charlie Brown |
January 9, 1976 |
CBS |
None |
| It's Arbor Day, Charlie Brown |
March 16, 1976 |
CBS |
None |
| It's Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown |
October 24, 1977 |
CBS |
None |
| What a Nightmare, Charlie Brown |
February 23, 1978 |
CBS |
None |
| Happy Birthday, Charlie Brown |
January 5, 1979 |
CBS |
None |
| You're the Greatest, Charlie Brown |
March 19, 1979 |
CBS |
None |
| She's a Good Skate, Charlie Brown |
February 25, 1980 |
CBS |
None |
| Life Is a Circus, Charlie Brown |
October 24, 1980 |
CBS |
None |
| It's Magic, Charlie Brown |
April 28, 1981 |
CBS |
None |
| Someday You'll Find Her, Charlie Brown |
October 30, 1981 |
CBS |
None |
| A Charlie Brown Celebration |
May 24, 1982 (1981) |
CBS |
None |
| Is This Goodbye, Charlie Brown? |
February 21, 1983 |
CBS |
None |
| It's an Adventure, Charlie Brown |
May 16, 1983 |
CBS |
None |
| What Have We Learned, Charlie Brown? |
May 30, 1983 |
CBS |
None |
| It's Flashbeagle, Charlie Brown |
April 16, 1984 |
CBS |
None |
| Snoopy's Getting Married, Charlie Brown |
March 20, 1985 |
CBS |
None |
| It's Your 20th Television Anniversary, Charlie Brown |
May 14, 1985 |
CBS |
None |
| You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown |
November 6, 1985 |
CBS |
None |
| Happy New Year, Charlie Brown! |
January 1, 1986 |
CBS |
None |
| Snoopy!!! The Musical |
January 29, 1988 |
CBS |
None |
| It's the Girl in the Red Truck, Charlie Brown |
September 27, 1988 |
CBS |
None |
| You Don't Look 40, Charlie Brown |
February 2, 1990 |
CBS |
None |
| Why, Charlie Brown, Why? |
March 16, 1990 |
CBS |
None |
| Snoopy's Reunion |
May 1, 1991 |
CBS |
None |
| It's Spring Training, Charlie Brown |
1992 |
CBS |
None |
| It's Christmastime Again, Charlie Brown |
November 27, 1992 |
CBS |
None |
| You're in the Super Bowl, Charlie Brown |
January 18, 1994 |
NBC |
None |
| It Was My Best Birthday Ever, Charlie Brown |
Straight to video (1997) |
Unaired |
|
| Good Grief, Charlie Brown: A Tribute to Charles Schulz |
February 11, 2000 |
CBS |
None |
| Here's to You, Charlie Brown: 50 Great Years |
May 10, 2000 |
CBS |
None |
|
It's the Pied Piper, Charlie Brown |
Straight to video (2000) |
Unaired |
|
| The Making of "A Charlie Brown Christmas" |
December 6, 2001 |
ABC |
Unknown |
|
A Charlie Brown Valentine |
February, 14, 2002 |
ABC |
ABC |
| Charlie Brown's Christmas Tales |
December 8, 2002 |
ABC |
ABC |
|
Lucy Must Be Traded, Charlie Brown |
August 29, 2003 |
ABC |
Unnoted |
|
I Want a Dog for Christmas, Charlie Brown |
December 9, 2003 |
ABC |
ABC |
| He's a Bully, Charlie Brown |
November 20, 2006 |
ABC |
ABC |
The
Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show
| Episode Name |
Original Air Date |
| Snoopy's Cat Fight |
9/17/1983 |
| Snoopy: Team Manager |
9/24/1983 |
| Linus and Lucy |
10/1/1983 |
| Lucy VS the World |
10/8/1983 |
| Linus' Security Blanket |
10/15/1983 |
| Snoopy: Man's Best Friend |
10/22/1983 |
| Snoopy the Psychitrist |
10/29/1983 |
| You Can't Win Charlie Brown |
11/5/1983 |
| The Lost Ballpark |
11/12/1983 |
| Snoopy's Football Career |
11/19/1983 |
| Chaos in the Classroom |
11/26/1983 |
| It's that Team Spirit, Charlie Brown |
12/3/1983 |
| Lucy Loves Schroeder |
12/10/1983 |
| Snoopy and the Giant |
9/14/1985 |
| Snoopy's Brother Spike |
9/21/1985 |
| Snoopy's Robot |
9/28/1985 |
| Peppermint Patty's School Days |
10/5/1985 |
| Sally's Sweet Baboo |
10/12/1985 |
| Episode Name |
Original Air Date |
| The Mayflower Voyagers |
10/21/1988 |
| The Birth of the Constitution" |
10/28/1988 |
| The Wright Brothers at Kitty Hawk |
11/4/1988 |
| The NASA Space Station |
11/11/1988 |
| The Building of the Transcontinental Railroad |
2/10/1989 |
| The Great Inventors |
3/10/1989 |
| The Smithsonian and the Presidency |
4/19/1989 |
| The Music and Heroes of America |
5/23/1989 |
Other
Specials
| Name |
Original Air Date |
Network |
| Snoopy at the Ice Follies |
10/24/1971 |
NBC |
| Snoopy's International Ice Follies |
11/12/1972 |
NBC |
| Snoopy Directs the Ice Follies |
11/13/1973 |
NBC |
| Snoopy's Musical on Ice |
5/24/1978 |
CBS |
| The Big Stuffed Dog |
2/8/1981 |
NBC |
Feature films
|